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News from Reuters

CA-BUSINESS Summary

01/07/09

GM back in court to seek approval for sale

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The only viable option to save General Motors Corp is a sale of its main assets to a "New GM," a U.S. Treasury official told a bankruptcy court on Wednesday as the automaker sought approval for the deal. GM was in the second day of a bankruptcy court hearing in Manhattan in which the automaker is asking Judge Robert Gerber to approve its asset sales, just one month after filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

World stocks begin third quarter on upbeat note

LONDON (Reuters) - World stocks began the third quarter on an upbeat note on Wednesday with European and emerging market shares rising around 1 percent and oil climbing on hopes for a recovery in demand. New York crude was up more than $1 near $71 a barrel.

Fiat CEO says Chrysler cash burn slows: report

MILAN (Reuters) - U.S. automaker Chrysler Group LLC has stemmed the pace at which it uses cash after emerging from bankruptcy last month as a slimmer company, Chief Executive Sergio Marchionne said in an interview with Bloomberg published on Wednesday. Chrysler went through $9.6 billion in cash in 2008. The Detroit car maker reorganized around what it considered its best assets and $6 billion in fresh financing from the U.S. and Canadian governments.

Oil rises above $71 on U.S. inventory drop, Nigeria

LONDON (Reuters) - Oil rose above $71 a barrel on Wednesday following a large drop in crude inventories in the United States, the world's top energy consumer, and output disruptions from militant attacks in Nigeria. U.S. crude futures were trading up $1.64 at $71.52 a barrel by 9:50 a.m. EDT. London Brent crude rose $1.72 to $71.01.

Air Canada machinists reject pension deal, union says

TORONTO (Reuters) - Members of Air Canada's largest union rejected the carrier's plan to suspend pension funding for nearly two years, complicating the cash-strapped airline's efforts to steady its finances, a newspaper reported on Tuesday. A slim majority of mechanics, baggage handlers, cargo agents and electricians narrowly voted against a proposed 21-month agreement that would have frozen their wages and put a moratorium on pension funding, the Globe and Mail said on its website.

Quebecor World gets court OKs on reorganization plan

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Bankrupt commercial printer Quebecor World Inc on Tuesday gained approval of its bankruptcy reorganization plan from judges in the United States and Canada, clearing the way for the company to exit bankruptcy protection. Judge Robert Mongeon of the Quebec Superior Court in Montreal said during a joint hearing with the U.S. bankruptcy court in Manhattan that he would sanction the company's plan under the Canadian Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act (CCAA).

Russia lifts, softens flu meat bans on U.S., Canada

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia has lifted a ban on meat imports from the U.S. states of Connecticut, Massachusetts and Michigan, and from Canada's Quebec province due to the improved situation surrounding the H1N1 virus. Russia's animal and plant health watchdog has also softened a ban on the U.S. state of Illinois and Canada's Ontario province, applying the restrictions only to imports of live pigs and uncooked pork, a statement by the watchdog Rosselkhoznadzor, seen by Reuters on Wednesday, said.

Canwest sells two regional television stations

TORONTO (Reuters) - Canwest Global Communications , Canada's biggest media company, said on Tuesday that it planned to sell two of its five regional television stations as it struggles to restructure its mounting debt load. The Winnipeg, Manitoba-based company, which owns Canada's Global television network, Australia's Network Ten and a chain of daily newspapers, agreed to sell CHCH-TV in Hamilton and CJNT-TV in Montreal to private broadcaster Channel Zero Inc.

Canadian economy slips in April

OTTAWA (Reuters) - Canada's economy contracted for the ninth straight month in April as the manufacturing, energy and retail industries scaled back activity in the deepest downturn since the early 1990s. Gross domestic product by industry fell 0.1 percent in the month compared with March, Statistics Canada said on Tuesday, suggesting the economy is entering its third quarter of recession.

World mining outlook grim, costs eat profit

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Short-term prospects for global mining companies are bleak, as rising costs eat into profit margins already depressed by the recession, according to a report by PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC). "There is no doubt that the industry is facing a tough road ahead," said Steve Ralbovsky, the professional services firm's U.S. mining industry expert.

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